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Monday, February 16, 2015

Chinese New Year 2015

February 19 starts the Chinese New Year which corresponds to the lunisolar calendar. The holiday is also called the Spring
Festival and is celebrated by Chinese communities around the world.
Festivities around this time are driven by a desire for prosperity and
good will. For instance, houses are cleaned in hopes of expelling bad
luck and making way for good luck. Debts are paid. Grudges are
forgotten. Encouraging messages (such as 福
which means good fortune) are hung up everywhere. Gifts are given.
On New Year's Eve, it is customary for families to reunite and enjoy
dinner together.

As
the new year begins, firecrackers and fireworks are set off in
multitude to cast out evil spirits and celebrate a fresh start. On this
day (the first of fifteen) dragon and lion dances are performed. Elders are visited by their descendants. Gifts of money are given to younger family members. People try to get as much good luck as possible.

Further festivities can be enjoyed for the next two weeks, including several birthdays. A couple examples are the God of Wealth's birthday on the second day (Feb. 20) and the “common man's birthday” on the seventh day (Feb. 25). On the fifteenth day (Mar. 5) the new year's celebration is concluded with the Lantern Festival. For this last day of the Spring Festival, candles are lit and lanterns are paraded through the streets.

2015 is the year of the goat (also called ram or sheep). More specifically it is the yinwoodgoat. In Chinese astrological beliefs, birth years follow cycles. The twelve-year zodiac cycle goes like this: rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, goat, monkey, rooster, dog, and then pig. The ten-year elemental cycle is as follows: wood, wood, fire, fire, earth, earth, metal, metal, water, and then water. The two-year yin-yang cycle is, obviously, yin then yang. These patterns combine to form one overall sixty-year cycle. Astrologers
use these cycles to determine the character traits and fortunes of a
person based on birth year. According to the sixty-year cycle, 2014 was
the year of the yang wood horse, and 2016 will be of the yang fire monkey. The astrological beliefs are so widespread that Chinese
communities experience an increase in birth rates during dragon years.
Parents try to have their children born on those years because
the dragon is the best zodiac animal. If you are born in a year of the
dragon, so the astrologers say, you will be smarter, luckier, and more
successful in life than if you were born any other year.